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From the Ethics of the Fathers: "He [Rabbi Tarfon] used to say, it is not incumbent upon you to complete the task, but you are not exempt from undertaking it."

Friday, March 11, 2016

More Anti-Israel Hate at Connecticut College - Noah Beck

Faculty speak out.

A Connecticut College professor has told colleagues that his school
has grown so hostile toward Jews that he can no longer recommend Jewish
students or professors come to the college.

“In my opinion,
this harassment of Jews on campus in the name of fighting for social
justice should end; immediately,” wrote Spencer J. Pack, an economics
professor, in a faculty-wide email.

His comments were
triggered by the smear campaign that pro-Palestinian students
successfully waged against a pro-Israel professor, resulting in his
indefinite leave from campus, and a more recent push to malign
Birthright (a program enabling student travel to Israel) by plastering the campus with posters.
The posters reportedly intimidated Jewish and pro-Israel members of the
Connecticut College community, while attempting to poison the minds of
uninformed students and faculty with vicious falsehoods about Israel.
The posters were put up by Conn Students in Solidarity with Palestine
(CSSP), whose faculty advisor, Eileen Kane, runs the school’s Global Islamic Studies program.

Kane’s Global Islamic Studies program also invited Palestinian-American poet Remi Kanazi to speak at Connecticut College on April 12. Kanazi, who is scheduled to give a "poetry performance," is on the organizing committee of the US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel and listed among its endorsers. His strategy has been to connect anti-Israel politics with popular urban struggles.

Making matters worse, Jasbir K. Puar was also invited to speak at Connecticut College. At a Feb. 3talk at Vassar College, Puar unleashed a torrent of
vicious anti-Israel lies and blood libels, including outrageous
accusations about Israel harvesting Palestinian organs and conducting
scientific experiments in “stunting” the growth of Palestinian bodies.
Her Connecticut College appearance was scrapped, but Kane has ignored
repeated questions about the invitation.

Hatred of Israel and overall hostility towards Jews at Vassar has been amply detailed. More
generally, campus hate against Israel and Jews has become an
increasingly frequent and widespread problem thanks to the “Boycott,
Divest, Sanction” (BDS) movement. Even Palestinians who aren’t
sufficiently critical of Israel are targeted by BDS. Bassem Eid, founder
of the Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring Group, was directly threatened by anti-Israel protesters while lecturing at the University of Chicago on Feb. 18. More recently, the New York Postreported on the hateful harassment of Jews at four City University of New York campuses.

Connecticut College seems to be moving in the same direction. Last spring, Connecticut College Professor Andrew Pessin was libeled and silenced in
a campaign led by Students for Justice in Palestine activist Lamiya
Khandaker. That campaign included condemnation of Pessin by scores of
Connecticut College departments and affiliates, including the Global Islamic Studies program. The administration nevertheless gave Khandaker the
"Scholar Activist Award." Then came the Birthright smear last
December, the Puar invitation, and the scheduled talk by anti-Israel
activist Kanazi, sponsored by the Global Islamic Studies program.

These developments reinforce the perception that Connecticut College
is hostile to pro-Israel voices. Meanwhile, discussion of the Pessin
affair continues as questions mount over the role and nature of the
school’s Islamic studies program. In a Jan. 26 email
to fellow faculty members, Manuel Lizarralde, a professor of
anthropology and botany, called the Pessin affair a “train wreck” and
expressed regret at previously staying silent. “Why did we not have the
Andrew defending his views?...We acted like vigilantes and found the
perfect scapegoat,” he wrote.

In a Feb. 4,
faculty-wide response to Lizarralde, Pack accused the Global Islamic
Studies program of organizing students to join the anti-Pessin campaign
and then sponsoring “a new group on campus that [posted the
anti-Birthright and anti-Israel] posters.” That’s when he called on the
harassment to stop and indicated that he couldn’t recommend Jews join
the Connecticut College community. In response, Pack received some
private support but wrote that “many, (perhaps most?), of the
faculty…are quite upset with me.”

Kane responded to Pack’s
email on Feb. 9, denying that CSSP is anti-Israel. But CSSP’s posters
smear the Birthright program with the label “settler colonialism,”
effectively demonizing any student participant in that program, and
spread the blatant lie that that there are “seven million Palestinian
refugees today.” Even the pro-Palestinian United Nations Relief and
Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) claims that there are only five million Palestinian refugees,
and that total is grossly inflated because UNRWA defines the term
“refugee” to include all subsequent generations of the original refugee –
a definition unique to Palestinians among all other global refugee groups.

Posters vilifying students who want to visit Israel as
“settler-colonists” and spreading blatant lies to undermine support for
Israel would seem to be “anti-Israel.” Kane did not respond to an email
asking for her definition of “anti-Israel” after her assertion that the
group behind those posters is not “anti-Israel.”

Kane’s
faculty-wide response to Pack’s email describes the Pessin controversy
as “a heated disagreement over ... Pessin’s Facebook post on the 2014
Gaza war.” That’s misleading, because it minimizes what happened. The
“disagreement” was more of a mob-like character assassination that
ignored Pessin’s insistence that his words had been purposely
distorted, the Washington Postarticle presenting evidence corroborating Pessin’s position, and Pessin’s immediate, polite apologyto the student who first voiced concern.

As if trying to resolve campus tensions, Kane asks “what are we going
to do to advance informed, responsible discussion of the history and
politics of Israel/Palestine on this campus?” But she may not be the
best arbiter of what constitutes a responsible discussion; she can’t
even recognize that her student group’s posters are blatantly
anti-Israel.

Equally troubling, her email claims that a
discussion of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is happening “with a
renewed sense of urgency...on campuses across the country” as if this
weren’t the result of the well-organized BDS efforts to advance a
viciously one-sided and inaccurate anti-Israel narrative at every campus
where the movement arrives. After all, why is there no comparable
“urgency” to exposing and punishing the countless crimes taking place in
Syria -- where an estimated 470,000 have been killed in five years (which is about five times the total death toll of a century of violence between Israelis and Palestinians)?

Kane’s email notes that we are in a time "when Islam is widely
misunderstood." One powerful way to reduce such misunderstanding would
be to highlight Muslim efforts to reform the way Islam is practiced. But Kane also refused to say whether the Global Islamic Studies program has invited any speakers who advocate such reforms.

When Pessin’s wife, Gabriella Rothman, was asked about the few
apologies that Pessin had received nearly a year after the events in
question, she said, “It's hard to get too excited about it,” given how
duplicitous and dishonest so many of his colleagues and friends had
been.

Remarkably, the Connecticut College administration
hasn’t taken any initiative to protect students and faculty brave enough
to espouse unpopular views (including support for Israel). Nor has it
issued any apology to Pessin, who has been forced out of the classroom
for nearly a year in the wake of the controversy. To regain some of its
credibility, Connecticut College should publish the results of an
independent investigation into the Pessin affair and a detailed plan of
how to avoid similar incidents in the future.

Noah Beck is the author of The Last Israelis, a doomsday thriller about the Iranian nuclear threat and current geopolitical issues in the Middle East.Source: http://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/262088/more-anti-israel-hate-connecticut-college-noah-beck Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.